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Page 1: Prepositions Illustrated

Sample Handmade Responses to Hale’s Sin and Syntax, Chapter 6, Prepositions

with corresponding citations from the chapter

Angelo State UniversityEnglish 4361: English GrammarDr. Laurence MusgroveDepartment of English and Modern LanguagesJanuary 31, 2013

www.theillustratedprofessor.com@lemusgro

Page 2: Prepositions Illustrated

“The most frequent prepositional sin is to replace one good, terse word with a stack of prepositional phrases… Anytime you can replace a cluster of words with one elegant one, do it” (104).

Page 3: Prepositions Illustrated

“Have you ever counted the number of ways windy writers and speakers avoid the direct verb now?” (104).

Page 4: Prepositions Illustrated

“To test whether a word is a preposition, try putting it in front of the words ‘the log’” (99).

Page 5: Prepositions Illustrated

“The most common prepositional error is forgetting that the noun in a prepositional phrase is the object of the preposition” (109).

Page 6: Prepositions Illustrated

“Some prepositional phrases are more dungeons than closets; trapped within are much worthier verbs, yearning to burst out” (106).

Page 7: Prepositions Illustrated

“Scour your writing for prepositional barnacles worthy only of being scraped away, and replace them with simpler words…” (105).

Page 8: Prepositions Illustrated

“Anytime you can replace a cluster of words with one elegant one, do it” (104).

Page 9: Prepositions Illustrated

“What’s with that headline…..rewrite the thing….which is possible with an active verb and fewer prepositional phrases” (108).

Page 10: Prepositions Illustrated

“The most frequent prepositional sin is to replace one good, terse word with a stack of prepositional phrases” (104).

Page 11: Prepositions Illustrated

“If you were to compare crafting prose to building a house, the nouns (and pronouns), verbs, adjectives, and adverbs would form the foundation...prepositions might be analogous to closet doors” (98). “Clear the clutter” (104).

Page 12: Prepositions Illustrated

“Prepositions often convey spatial relationships, telling us where X is in relation to Y” (99).

Page 13: Prepositions Illustrated

“Prepositions create mischief…prepositions are indispensable” (101).

Page 14: Prepositions Illustrated

“Ideas expressed through prepositional phrases must be carefully crafted into parallel pieces” (102). “Those two prepositional phrases are nice and symmetrical, adding rhythmic value to the sentence” (102).


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